“Is he dead? is he dead?”
she asked distractedly. “I’ve just
come from the village. Why didn’t you send
for me? Tell me, is he dead? Oh, tell me
at once!”
She caught the Regimental Surgeon’s
arm. He looked down at her, over his glasses,
benignly, for she had always been a favourite of his,
and answered:
“Alive, alive, my dear.
Bad rip in the shoulder worn out weak shattered but
good for a while yet yes, yes certainement!”
With a wayward impulse, she threw
her arms around his neck and kissed him on the cheek.
The embrace disarranged his glasses and flushed his
face like a schoolgirl’s, but his eyes were full
of embarrassed delight.
“There, there,” he said,
“we’ll take care of him !”
Then suddenly he paused, for the real significance
of her action dawned upon him.
“Dear me,” he said in disturbed meditation;
“dear me!”
She suddenly opened the bedroom door
and went in, followed by Nic. The Regimental
Surgeon dropped his mouth and cheeks in his hand reflectively,
his eyes showing quaintly and quizzically above the
glasses and his fingers.
“Well, well! Well, well!”
he said, as if he had encountered a difficulty.
“It it will never be possible.
He would not marry her,” he added, and then,
turning, went abstractedly down the stairs.
Ferrol was in a deep sleep when Christine
and her brother entered the chamber. Her face
turned still more pale when she saw him, flushed, and
became pale again. There were leaden hollows round
his eyes, and his hair was matted with perspiration.
Yet he was handsome and helpless.
Her eyes filled with tears. She turned her head
away from her brother and went softly to the window,
but not before she had touched the pale hand that
lay nerveless upon the coverlet.
“It’s not feverish,”
she said to Nic, as if in necessary explanation of
the act.
She stood at the window for a moment,
looking out, then said:
“Come here, Nic, and tell me all about it.”
He told her all he knew: how
he had come to the old house by appointment with Ferrol;
had tried to get into the store-room; had found the
doors bolted; had heard the noise of a wild animal
inside; had run out, tried a window, at last wrenched
it open and found Ferrol in a dead faint. He
went to the table and brought back the broken bayonet.
“That’s all he had to
fight with,” he said. “Fire of a little
hell, but he had grit after all!”
“That’s all he had to
fight with!” she repeated, as she untwisted
the handkerchief from the hilt end. “Why
did you say he had true grit ’after
all’? What do you mean by that ’after
all’?”
“Well, you don’t expect
much from a man with only one lung eh?”
“Courage isn’t in the
lungs,” she answered. Then she added:
“Go and fetch me a bottle of brandy I’m
going to bathe his hands and feet in brandy and hot
water as soon as he’s awake.”
“Better let mother do that,
hadn’t you?” he asked rather hesitatingly,
as he moved towards the door.
Her eyes snapped fire. “Nic mon
Dieu, hear the nice Nic!” she said.
“The dear Nic, who went in swimming with ”
She said no more, for he had no desire
to listen to an account of his misdeeds, which were
not a few, and Christine had a galling tongue.
When the door was shut she went to
the bed, sat down on a chair beside it, and looked
at Ferrol earnestly and sadly.
“My dear! my dear, dear, dear!”
she said in a whisper, “you look so handsome
and so kind as you lie there like no man
I ever saw in my life. Who’d have fought
as you fought and nearly dead! Who’d
have had brains enough to know just what to do!
My darling, that never said ’my darling’
to me, nor heard me call you so. Suppose you haven’t
a dollar, not a cent, in the world, and suppose you’ll
never earn a dollar or a cent in the world, what difference
does that make to me? I could earn it; and I’d
give more for a touch of your finger than a thousand
dollars; and more for a month with you than for a lifetime
with the richest man in the world. You never
looked cross at me, or at any one, and you never say
an unkind thing, and you never find fault when you
suffer so. You never hurt any one, I know.
You never hurt Vanne Castine ”
Her fingers twitched in her lap, and
then clasped very tight, as she went on:
“You never hurt him, and yet
he’s tried to kill you in the most awful way.
Perhaps you’ll die now perhaps you’ll
die to-night but no, no, you shall not!”
she cried in sudden fright and eagerness, as she got
up and leaned over him. “You shall not die;
you shall live for a while oh!
yes, for a while yet,” she added, with a pitiful
yearning in her voice; “just for a little while till
you love me, and tell me so! Oh, how could that
devil try to kill you!”
She suddenly drew herself up.
“I’ll kill him and his
bear too now, now, while you lie there sleeping.
And when you wake I’ll tell you what I’ve
done, and you’ll you’ll love
me then, and tell me so, perhaps. Yes, yes, I’ll ”
She said no more, for her brother
entered with the brandy.
“Put it there,” she said,
pointing to the table. “You watch him till
I come. I’ll be back in an hour; and then,
when he wakes, we’ll bathe him in the hot water
and brandy.”
“Who told you about hot water
and brandy?” he asked her, curiously.
She did not answer him, but passed
through the door and down the hall till she came to
Nic’s bedroom; she went in, took a pair of pistols
from the wall, examined them, found they were fully
loaded, and hurried from the room.
About a half-hour later she appeared
before the house which once had belonged to Vanne
Castine. The mortgage had been foreclosed, and
the place had passed into the hands of Sophie and
Magon Farcinelle; but Castine had taken up his abode
in the house a few days before, and defied anyone
to put him out.
A light was burning in the kitchen
of the house. There were no curtains to the window,
but an old coat had been hung up to serve the purpose,
and light shone between a sleeve of it and the window-sill.
Putting her face close to the window, the girl could
see the bear in the corner, clawing at its chain and
tossing its head from side to side, still panting
and angry from the fight.
Now and again, also, it licked the
bayonet-wound between its shoulders, and rubbed its
lacerated nose on its paw. Castine was mixing
some tar and oil in a pan by the fire, to apply to
the still bleeding wounds of his Michael. He
had an ugly grin on his face.
He was dressed just as in the first
day he appeared in the village, even to the fur cap;
and presently, as he turned round, he began to sing
the monotonous measure to which the bear had danced.
It had at once a soothing effect upon the beast.
After he had gone from the store-room,
leaving Ferrol dead, as he thought, it was this song
alone which had saved himself from peril; for the
beast was wild from pain, fury and the taste of blood.
As soon as they had cleared the farmyard, he had begun
this song, and the bear, cowed at first by the thrusts
of its master’s pike, quieted to the well-known
ditty.
He approached the bear now, and, stooping,
put some of the tar and oil upon its nose. It
sniffed and rubbed off the salve, but he put more on;
then he rubbed it into the wound of the breast.
Once the animal made a fierce snap at his shoulder,
but he deftly avoided it, gave it a thrust with a
sharp-pointed stick, and began the song again.
Presently he rose and came towards the fire.
As he did so he heard the door open.
Turning round quickly, he saw Christine standing just
inside. She had a shawl thrown round her, and
one hand was thrust in the pocket of her dress.
She looked from him to the bear, then back again to
him.
He did not realise why she had come.
For a moment, in his excited state, he almost thought
she had come because she loved him. He had seen
her twice since his return; but each time she would
say nothing to him further than that she wished not
to meet or to speak to him at all. He had pleaded
with her, had grown angry, and she had left him.
Who could tell perhaps she had come to
him now as she had come to him in the old days.
He dropped the pan of tar and oil. “Chris!”
he said, and started forward to her.
At that moment the bear, as if it
knew the girl’s mission, sprang forward, with
a growl. Its huge mouth was open, and all its
fierce lust for killing showed again in its wild lunges.
Castine turned, with an oath, and thrust the steel-set
pike into its leg. It cowered at the voice and
the punishment for an instant, but came on again.
Castine saw the girl raise a pistol
and fire at the beast. He was so dumfounded that
at first he did not move. Then he saw her raise
another pistol. The wounded bear lunged heavily
on its chain once twice in
a devilish rage, and as Christine prepared to fire,
snapped the staple loose and sprang forward.
At the same moment Castine threw himself
in front of the girl, and caught the onward rush.
Calling the beast by its name, he grappled with it.
They were man and servant no longer, but two animals
fighting for their lives. Castine drew out his
knife, as the bear, raised on its hind legs, crushed
him in its immense arms, and still calling, half crazily,
“Michael! Michael! down, Michael!”
he plunged the knife twice in the beast’s side.
The bear’s teeth fastened in
his shoulder; the horrible pressure of its arms was
turning his face black; he felt death coming, when
another pistol shot rang out close to his own head,
and his breath suddenly came back. He staggered
to the wall, and then came to the floor in a heap as
the bear lurched downwards and fell over on its side,
dead.
Christine had come to kill the beast
and, perhaps, the man. The man had saved her
life, and now she had saved his; and together they
had killed the bear which had maltreated Tom Ferrol.
Castine’s eyes were fixed on
the dead beast. Everything was gone from him
now even the way to his meagre livelihood;
and the cause of it all, as he in his blind, unnatural
way thought, was this girl before him this
girl and her people. Her back was towards the
door. Anger and passion were both at work in
him at once.
“Chris,” he said, “Chris,
let’s call it even-eh? Let’s make
it up. Chris, ma chérie, don’t
you remember when we used to meet, and was fond of
each other? Let’s make it up and leave here now to-night-eh?
“I’m not so poor, after
all. I’ll be paid by Papineau, the leader
of the Rebellion ” He made a couple
of unsteady steps towards her, for he was weak yet.
“What’s the good you’re
bound to come to me in the end! You’ve
got the same kind of feelings in you; you’ve ”
She had stood still at first, dazed
by his words; but she grew angry quickly, and was
about to speak as she felt, when he went on:
“Stay here now with me.
Don’t go back. Don’t you remember
Shangois’s house? Don’t you remember
that night that night when ah!
Chris, stay here ”
Her face was flaming. “I’d
rather stay in a room full of wild beasts like that” she
pointed to the bear, “than be with you one minute you
murderer!” she said, with choking anger.
He started towards her, saying:
“By the blood of Joseph! but you’ll stay
just the same; and ”
He got no further, for she threw the
pistol in his face with all her might. It struck
between his eyes with a thud, and he staggered back,
blind, bleeding and faint, as she threw open the door
and sped away in the darkness.
Reaching the Manor safely, she ran
up to her room, arranged her hair, washed her hands,
and came again to Ferrol’s bedroom. Knocking
softly she was admitted by Nic. There was an
unnatural brightness in her eyes. “Where’ve
you been?” he asked, for he noticed this.
“What’ve you been doing?”
“I’ve killed the bear
that tried to kill him,” she answered.
She spoke louder than she meant.
Her voice awakened Ferrol.
“Eh, what?” he said, “killed
the bear, mademoiselle, my dear friend,”
he added, “killed the bear!” He coughed
a little, and a twinge of pain crossed over his face.
She nodded, and her face was alight
with pleasure. She lifted up his head and gave
him a little drink of brandy. His fingers closed
on hers that held the glass. His touch thrilled
her.
“That’s good, that’s easier,”
he remarked.
“We’re going to bathe
you in brandy and hot water, now Nic and
I,” she said.
“Bathe me! Bathe me!” he said, in
amused consternation.
“Hands and feet,” Nic explained.
A few minutes later as she lifted
up his head, her face was very near him; her breath
was in his face. Her eyes half closed, her fingers
trembled. He suddenly drew her to him and kissed
her. She looked round swiftly, but her brother
had not noticed.